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Bodleian Library, MS Don. d.
3. Not previously published.

These letters were edited with the assistance of Carol Bolton, Tim Fulford and Ian Packer

For permission to publish the text of MSS in their possession, the editor wishes to thank the Beinecke Rare
Books and Manuscript Library, Yale University; Berg Collection of English and American Literature, The New
York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations; the Bodleian Library Oxford University; the
British Library; Boston Public Library; the Syndics of Cambridge University Library; the Syndics of the
Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge; Haverford College, Connecticut; the Historical Society of Pennsylvania; the
Hornby Library, Liverpool Libraries and Information Services; the Houghton Library, Harvard University;
the John Rylands Library, Manchester; the Kenneth Spencer Research Library, University of Kansas; Luton
Museum (Bedfordshire County Council); Massachusetts Historical Society; McGill University Library; the
National Library of Scotland; the Newberry Library, Chicago; the New York Public Library (Pforzheimer
Collections); the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York; the Public Record Offices of Bedford, Suffolk (Bury
St Edmunds) and Northumberland, the Master and Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge; the Society of
Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne; the Trustees of the William Salt Library, Stafford, the Wisbech and
Fenland Museum; the University of Virginia Library.

A research grant from the British Academy made much of the archival work possible, as did support from the
English Department of Nottingham Trent University.

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length.

Southey's spelling has not been regularized.

Writing in other hands appearing on these manuscripts has been indicated as such, the content recorded
in brackets.

& has been used for the ampersand sign.

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decimals.

I send you these few lines to say that the 7th & 8th books of RoderickRoderick, the Last of the
Goths (1814). are on their way to you. Lord Sunderlin being very
solicitous to carry something to London for me, I invented this commission to
accommodate him, & he said he would leave it himself with at in
your hands: – now if he should make his appearance with it it may be well
th you should know that this good natured old man, whom the first
influenza will carry off, is an Irishman, & t elder brother to
Malone the Shakespeare-commentator, whose death last year seems to have been a
mortal grief to the family. The
Shakespearean scholar Edmond Malone (1741–1812; DNB).
Sunderlin was acting as executor of his brother’s estate.Lady S. who goes with him, must in
her day have been a sweet woman. – We see a good deal of them.

Bedford will probably
have given you the antecedent books before these arrive.